Northcentral University Reviews
No Bad Reviews 
By: alnjan (In Progress) on June 18, 2008
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Unfortunately, very few accurate reviews reflecting objective experience are ever posted here. I doubt that this one will make it, either. Thus, I will make it brief. No one completing the Phy PhD program within the last 6 months of 2008 will give a faverable assessment of this school, namely because no one will be allowed to graduate. All dissertations are being withheld. I wish this truth could make it to those with interest. Getting through the NCU courses isn't that difficult. Getting through the dissertation process is impossible. Don't sign up, it's a scam
BEWARE! No one Gets Passed Dissertation 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on June 18, 2008
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If I had been writing this review about a month ago, I would have reiterated all the positive, sunshine comments I see posted. Unfortunately, NCU has really CHANGED. I finally arrived at my first dissertation class. I've been enrolled for over a month, just waiting for approval. The process was straightforward, at first: the dissertation was approved by all committee members. The disastrous shuffling around of staff, however, caused my dissertation to sit for about 20 days before it was assigned to a Reviewer. After getting relatively quick approval from all committee members, my Reviewer, basically told me, in no uncertain terms, to start my dissertation over. I will have to create 7 new instruments do pilot tests and change all my hypotheses and add several more. In general terms she has made it impossible to get my dissertation approved. Her recommendations would take years to complete. I heard from my committee Chair that the NCU Reviewers are now stopping approval on all dissertations. My Concept Paper was approved. It supposedly had comments as to how I was supposed to make changes; however, I did not receive the paper due to technical "gliches" in the system (or at least that is what I was told). I'm wondering if anyone else is having difficulties getting their dissertation approved. I believe with the entire shake up at NCU, they will not be approving many dissertations in the future. They will, however, take your encourage you and guide you down the rosy path until they get all your money. I'm hoping to get a class action law suit started. Yes, if you have already graduated or have yet to get to your research classes, you probably think the world of NCU. But I'd like to see someone who has graduated within the last week to give a positive review. DO NOT ENROLL, it will take five years, but you will definitely be sorry!!!!!
DBA in Advanced Accounting 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on June 16, 2008
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Excellent program, an inexpensive alternative to others schools that offer similar programs that requires inflexible requirements. NCU is not for everyone, you really have to be self motivated to be able to move forward. Hence, if you don't posses this drive this school is not for you.
NCU Rigor 
By: jerry.green (In Progress) on June 16, 2008
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I graduated with a B.Sc. and M.A. from traditional B&M universities. I have found that the rigor required to succeed at NCU is at least as difficult if not more so. Recently, after four years of rigorous study, I’ve earned doctoral candidacy status at NCU, the ABD stage in my journey. My dissertation committee members all teach at very reputable universities across the country, in addition to teaching at NCU, and one is also a director with the APA. They require no less of me than one of their students completing a dissertation from their B&M school. Change seems more difficult for some people, nonetheless however, over-time, fewer and fewer people will leave their home to attend school. Regionally accredited universities, such as NCU, are at the forefront of this imminent change.
NCU is outstanding 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on May 24, 2008
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I have to say...it was affirming to see that onlinedegreereviews.com rated NCU in the top 5 (student choice) as best accredited on-line educational organizations. As a HS principal and in the field of education for more than 18 years, I truly did not expect an on-line university to meet my expectations as they have in the Ed.D. program. The materials, expectations/standards for assignments, pacing, and mentoring are equally outstanding. I've read a few vicious, paranoid remarks about NCU (and other) on-line programs, but I have to question the student-sources. The website is extremely organized, clear, and outlines expectations for each course.
Positive Experience 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on April 15, 2008
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I have been very pleased with my experience at NCU. I am a busy higher ed administrator in a rural area and the structure of the classes at NCU meet my needs. All of my mentors have been helpful and return e-mails quickly. I can honestly say that I have learned more from this educational experience than any of the others at traditional brick and mortar schools.
A look at NCU 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on April 15, 2008
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I've found NCU to be like other colleges. The same problems you encounter at other schools you experience at NCU except most of the contact is either online or through phone calls. Just as in other schools you encounter professors whom you think are not too good. However, you also encounter exceptional professors to. In many ways, the support staff is more helpful than in non-cyber colleges. People respond quickly and kindly to requests and don't give you an 'attitude' if you ask for help. NCU is fully accredited.
You must be a Thinker! 
By: initia (In Progress) on April 13, 2008
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NCU has been a great place for me. I have plenty of education at "bricks and mortar institutions," and rate this education as the best in my life. I am completing a Business PhD after retiring from a successful 20 year career in business. One my think that I knew everything needed for the business world based on my experience. Not true. This education forces you to think! There is plenty of cross interaction with other learners and professors. Most professors are well credentialed in the business or education fields in their own rights. I currently interact with higher education administration in a political capacity, and am shocked at their comparative skills against those I have met online at NCU. This is an excellent education community that should not be overlooked or undercut. The criticism that I have heard is mainly unfounded. NCU requires you to think, if you need to be coddled go somewhere else. But, if you like to think, NCU will greatly add to your status as a scholar, professional capacities, and to your merit in the business world. I would hire any NCU business grad.
NCU - PhD Bus Admin 
By: kens.beardog (In Progress) on April 11, 2008
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Currently in the research dissertation proposal phase, and have been an NCU Learner since 9/2003. I have found the growth of the University to be sure and steady. My experience is that this is a premier online distance learning University. I read that some are unhappy, but I can tell anyone that my skills have grown while I have been pursuing my PhD at this University. This is a fine University, and I heartily endorse it to anyone seeking an advanced degree, or even an undergraduate degree.
Great for some, not for others 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on April 11, 2008
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NCU has a tremendous upside if you're very self-directed and need/prefer to work at your own pace. NCU's model is truly individualized learning, with no group projects, no live meetings, no synchronous sessions. Learners can work at their own pace. The pay-as-you-go format is also much easier on the wallet than places like Walden or Capella. To get the most out of NCU, however, you can't be a wallflower. You'll need to ask questions, be a little assertive if you don't get answers right away and generally speak up when/if problems occur. I'm halfway through the the program and have had very few problems. Those I have had were taken care of quickly and easily.
Licensure 
By: rgiunta (In Progress) on March 31, 2008
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I did a practicum through NCU to full a requirement for state certification in Substance Abuse Counseling. I'm considering doctoral work. Has anyone successfully licensed with a degree from NCU?
NCU is OK and improving (hopefully) 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on March 30, 2008
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NCU is unique in its style. It is truly 100% online. Its main advantage is flexibility in completing courses for busy full-time working professionals. It is also one of the affordable universities. Like in all other universities, every mentor is different. Some are responsive and some are not. Some read the assignments closely, some do not, but generally course work effort is reflected in grades. They recently started to be more interactive with students and taking their inputs for improvements. I am hopeful that it will improve from its present position.
Mixed Review 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on March 13, 2008
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An audit of all processes and programs related to the Ph.D. program in Psychology will show: (1) Weaknesses in the mentors backgrounds, knowledge, experience, and teaching capabilities. (2) Direct incompatibility regarding stated course requirements at NCU, the course fundamentals, core learning goals, and what is acceptable as a standard in the academic arena. The course outlines need to be updated and consistent. I have two graduate degrees, one of which is from a top ivy league school. What is required for course completion should match course description. In most cases it does not. (3) Mentor communication is very limited, even when it is requested or solicited. (4) Stay away from the major discussion areas as they contain so much erroneous (and silly) information. (5) The course work is not rigorous (very simple) and most points are lost or gained on APA style mistakes. APA style is important but quality content ranks higher in the real world. More challenges need to be incorporated. Most courses can be finished in six weeks, if feedback is timely(6) Clinical courses need more solid and up to date clinical training such as neuropsychology. This is what I have found so far. I hope this review is helpful and productive.
NCU-Good Support 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on March 11, 2008
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Treated very well. The University cares very much for their students and their progress. Mentor offer timely responses and direction.
My experience at NCU 
By: langewasheb22 (Graduate) on February 28, 2008
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I just finished my studies at NCU. I was in the doctoral program in education. I have to say that when I started with Dr. Hollywood, the experience was absolutely great. After three years, Dr. H. was gone. I spoke with her after her termination and she told me the new president told her the school was going in a different direction. Well, I am one to give everything a chance, but the new direction was one of chaos and lack of support. Thank god I was almost finished, because quite honestly if I was just starting, I would have gotten the heck out of there. I wouldn't recommend the university to anyone, and I had recommended it to no less than 5 friends. Now I heard that they only got 3 years of reaffirmation, which I understand in the world of accreditation is not good. Of course, it is better than probation, but not a sign of confidence. Luckily I am out with an accreditated degree. The place it is now isn't the place it was, and that is a shame. We had a honor society in the school, which I understand there is no support for any longer. The new provost has completely turned the place upside down. I am an Ed.D. and he has been quoted as saying that Ed.D. are inferior to Ph.D's. Inferior? No just different in focus. There are no faculty left. Now they use all adjuncts. The service with the dissertation has become a nightmare. My friends who are in dissertation are now waiting weeks and weeks for feedback and no one seems to know who is on first or second base. I would not recommend NCU, and I hate saying that given I am now an alum.
NCU and the future of online degrees 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on February 24, 2008
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I've read a lot of these reviews about NCU. Many are true and many are false, but perception is reality in the eyes of the beholder. Basically, NCU is an online correspondence school: - NCU gives the student the assignment - the student does it - the student turns it in for grading - at the end, a grade is given - and, hopefully, a degree is obtained. There are no lectures (like at a Brick & Morter University) and there is no student interaction. The only interaction I got from mentors was after I completed an assignment -- then the mentor would provide constructive criticism, along with a grade. If I needed help, then I found answers on my own i.e. there is no one to babysit you or to hold your hand. Once I got to the dissertation phase, then I talked to the mentor via telephone to get a basic idea of what his expectations were. I have a MA from a traditional Brick & Morter school, so I have a basis of comparison from which to compare NCU. I learned more knowledge at NCU, but I made more "community connections" at my Brick & Morter school. Which is more advantageous? I'm not sure, but either way: both schools will provide a regionally accredited degree. Many NCU students seem to be complaining that NCU is nothing more than a correspondence school because NCU simply provides the assignments and the student completes them with little to no supervision. The only way around this dilemma is to enroll in a traditional Brick and Morter university where there is plenty of instructor-student interaction, as well as student-student interaction. Some people need this kind of interaction, while others don't need it at all to obtain a degree. I also took a class at the University of Phoenix online and, frankly, I didn't get anything out of the "group projects;" nor did I get anything out of the "group postings" where we had to make a "quality post" for others to read. It was silly. NCU bypasses that and allows students to work on their own, which I prefer; but conversely, I really enjoyed the interaction that I got while obtaining a MA degree at a Brick & Morter school. The 21st Century is the "information age" and all of these online schools are unfolding before our very eyes. Is it the wave of the future? Time will tell. It's probably going to be contingent on: 1. the students' perceived value of the degrees 2. the community's perceived value of the degrees 3. the long-term sustained profitability of online institutions 4. the regional accreditors My .02
NCU 
By: cpe590s03 (In Progress) on February 22, 2008
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Excellent school. I am currently enrolled in their Ph.D. program and am very happy with the school. Classes are not easy but the mentors are very helpful. Be prepared to work. If you need your hand held and you cannot figure things out on your own, then maybe NCU is not for you. Overall I am pleased.
NCU's marketing doesn't match it's delivery 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on February 17, 2008
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I was academically dismissed from Northcentral University in January. The primary cause of my failure as an NCU student was the complete lack of mentor-student interaction. Even when I responded that I was having difficulty during the first research class, the mentor never responded until he posted an unsatisfactory grade. Please read the complete story at www.ncublogs.com. All NCU students that have experienced the lack of mentorship during their classes should leave their contact information in the comments (the comments are moderated before display, I will not publish personal info). A single person such as myself cannot change NCU. Perhaps as a group, our collective voices can get the attention of NCU or the Arizona Attorney General or the FTC. NCU is not delivering on their marketing promises.
NCU- an honest review 
By: kierstin6 (In Progress) on February 10, 2008
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Northcentral university AACSB & regionally accredited. A quality education for people who are self starters! I'm a PhD student. The educational rigor received at NCU has expanded my knowledge more than ground education ever did. The reason for this is I make the schedule so I am "awake" and "focused". You must be self-directed and internally motivated to learn. Highly organized comes to mind too. You have to be willing to pick up the phone and call your mentors and facilitators when you need something. Most call back within 24-48 hours and I have taken 18 courses all with different facilitators. But, with anything there are better facilitators than others-JUST LIKE IN TRADITIONAL SCHOOL! BOTTOM LINE: The school is great & they have some of the best facilitators and mentors. In all things, we all relate differently to people. Sometimes we don't relate to how someone explains something to us at all. So, you must take the initiative and find someone who can explain it to you! I went to University of Phoenix for my MBA and did not enjoy the experience. I learned a lot but, the school was too structured. Lots of busy work. Maybe that is better for some people. Many can attest that there is nothing worse than waking up for an 8am class at a traditional school after working until 4am because it's the only time the school offers it that semester! Half asleep makes your grade suffer but you do it because if you don't you will be in school on a 6 year or 7 year plan. Some bloggers on this site have blown my mind! Why are you stating that purposeful over inflation of their school ratings because they question the "worth." Online education continues to grow because professionals cannot go back to the "struggling student status" and need the education for promotion and wage increase. Anyone who "questions the education worth" should really go to brick and mortar schools. Why waste your time and money for convenience and the ability to keep your job instead of becoming a poor student again? Better yet, why over inflate? Just be honest, why aide hurting others if you believe your education was not good enough? People blow my mind. It is no wonder we have so many problems in this country! If you have interest on how you can find other legit online schools check out www.myspace.com/kierstin6
Northcentral University 
By: langewasben22 (In Progress) on February 10, 2008
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Trying to be objective, I found NCU to be a disappointment. Already having a master in education, I went into the school of education because I heard so many wonderful things about the program and the mentors. Well two months after I enroll, the entire school of education faculty and chair are gone. The person who recruited me, Dr. LeBeau was terrific and she was terminated. So, I am now leaving and taking my credits and transferring to Walden. This is not what I signed up for!I don't know what they are doing, but all of a sudden I was locked out of a class, lost my mentor, no one communicated with me, and the new chari doesn't seem to have a clue. Sorry, but I won't be treated shabby just because the tuition is low. Besides, I can get financial aid at other schools. Ben
Very Very Little communication. I don't recommend. 
By: sam47240030 (In Progress) on February 9, 2008
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I've been a student for about 3mos, and the exchange with the professor (aka mentor) is very limited. I was led to believe one could at least call & clarify questions. you cannot. all communication has to be via a very antiquated web interface that is available on the Univ's website. i constantly felt like my hands were tied & that i was never getting a single ounce of value from my course. my spouse, signs up for a course with a California online university & there is direct participation from the professor, the students, etc. The professor at that univ, has comments & guidance on a daily or at least weekly basis. There is so much interaction there. After seeing that, I'm strongly considering asking for my payment back. But I think I have lost the $1500 that I put it. I was referred to NCU by a friend, but I would strongly recommend you consider alternatives.
Not any more 
By: kencolken (In Progress) on February 8, 2008
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A year ago I would have given a rating of 9! There have been lots of changes at NCU. The person who made the School of Education so great was riffed in December-I think about 20 full time faculty were fired. They closed down the writing program and stopped work on the doc research center. Lots of high quality, terminally degreed folks just terminated -why? Why mess with something that was so great. Now the internal blogs are full of complaints from business, psychology and education students who aren't getting the service they had just a couple of months ago. Sounds like the place is in trouble and some really bad decisions are being made. Let's hope it isn't all about money and making the person who owns it just richer. I cannot get any help when I call. My advisor told me her phone was being tapped and to write me on her personal account! Anyway, just be careful if you are thinking about enrolling. I am almost finished with my dissertation and am glad to be getting out while they are still accredited.
Happy Student!!!!!! 
By: joannb72 (In Progress) on February 3, 2008
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Northcentral University is a great schooland a terrific value. It is both regionally accredited and accredited by the ACBSP. The school is currently going through the re-accreditation process, but this is a standard procedure to retain accreditation. I am currently enrolled in the MBA program and I love it! This is not a school for someone that needs their hand held every step of the way. There is support from the staff but students must be proactive and take ownership of their own education. There is good and bad everywhere. My husband is currently attending University of Phoenix (both on-line and classroom)and he has had problems from the academic advisor all the way to the on-line system having missing information. Although it is hard watching his struggles; it makes me appreciate NCU all the more. This is your education and your future don't settle for anything less than what you know you deserve. Do your research, aks questions and then ask more questions. No matter where you end up going to school make the most of it.
Great for Self-Directed Learners! 
By: tfelke (In Progress) on February 2, 2008
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I'm a doctoral student at Northcentral University and the online learning mentoring approach has worked well for me. Most of the mentors I've worked with have responded within a day to my questions and assignments. Their feedback was helpful and encouraging. The course work and assignments push you to develop and use higher order thinking skills. I've been surprised at how much I've learned in the program. I recommend NCU to any student who is mature, self-directed, and motivated to earn a degree.
Good experience 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on January 25, 2008
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I am in my 5th course through Northcentral University, Prescott AZ, in the PhD Psychology/Marriage and Family Therapy Concentration. I am very satisfied with this program, and have found that the books and research articles have been informative and provided useful information with my client population. Out of 5 instructors, I have had only one that I had significant difficulty reaching through email, three who were accessible and provided sound feedback regarding assignments, and one instructor who I consider one of the most engaged and motivating instructor I have ever had. This instructor's feedback on assignments has truly helped me be a more accomplished writer. My academic advisor promptly emailed me or called me, and I have had numerous phone calls with library staff to help walk me through a problem finding articles. While my undergraduate and graduate degrees were from B&M schools, most nobably Wake Forest University, I believe that I am the most important part of my education,and have found Northcentral willing to help me reach my academic goals. Northcentral U.'s regional accreditation is also a major reason I chose them. They are not AAMFT accredited, which is the accrediting body of my profession. If I were not already licensed in my field, this would have hindered me from attending, but being licensed, my degree will have merit because it is from a regionally accredited university. I recommend Northcentral without reservation.
This is a VERY GOOD school! 
By: taxtoons (In Progress) on January 21, 2008
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I have an MBA from a brick and mortar school. I also could have chosen to get my PhD from it with less cost and CERTAINLY LESS EFFORT. I chose NCU because of the work required, I wanted VALUE for my dollar. I have profited GREATLY from what I have learned. Those that criticize the program are possibly not putting forth enough effort on their own. I find the large number of texts and the quantity of writing to be very helpful in pushing me to success. I am successful in business, and the courses have helped me even further in that regard. I would recommend NCU to anyone.
Good experience 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on January 20, 2008
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For a working adult learner, this school is ideal. Of course you will work more independently than at most b&m schools. However, I have an MS and an MA from b&m schools and found that at the graduate level, you are expected to be (and should be) able to guide and design your own learning experience when attending classes in person. The dissertation process is both lengthy and rigid and I know that my product will be able to stand up to most (if not all) of those created at b&m schools (and I've read enough dissertations at this point to know of what I speak).
Poor Correspondence School 
By: mhitson (In Progress) on January 14, 2008
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I have taken four courses. I have a BS, MS, MBA, and my Doctorate is close to complete. You need to understand that this is NOT an online school. I completed my MBA at another online school. It is a correspondence school where the only difference is that items are exchanged virtually instead of through the US Mail. You will basically work completely on your own with no lectures, no discussion, no group work, no tests, and just hand in papers at your own pace. Really, it is a joke. I would never tell someone to use their own money for this. If your company will pay and you want to do this just for fun, not advancement, etc. - it is ccol - otherwise you are wasting your time.
doctoral candidate 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on January 13, 2008
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I am working on a second doctorate at NCU. Interaction with mentors is minimal. Mentor expertise is variable, which is no different than what one encounters in the brick and mortar environment. University documents, handbooks, templates, teleconferences and PowerPoint presentations are great sources of information. Overall, a sound learning experience. And, to dispell the darkness, NCU is a regionally accredited institution of higher learning.
What a program?? 
By: samcbrian (In Progress) on January 11, 2008
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just started my program and i can't get hold of anyone(mentors) tuition rate is good but the support you get is zero. NCU administrators do something.
Vested Interest 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on January 10, 2008
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I have just started my degree program - so I have little VESTED INTEREST in giving this university an inflated rating (In other words, I haven't gotten half way through my degreee program and have double posted high marks because I'm concerned what my degree will be worth 2 years from now). The good: it's cheap, easy to get in, never have to leave your house. The bad: you do all the work with little to no support, the academic advisors are nice until they get your tuition, and the "mentors" I have come in contact with treat you like an elementary school student. The argument that people who have trouble at NCU aren't cut out to be "self-directed learners" is interesting. If NCU interprets self-directed as "we don't have to give you any academic guidance" then they should delete the propaganda from their website which states otherwise and start calling the "mentors" "hired part time grade-givers." Furthermore, the version of self-directed they seem to be using is more similar to the "write a book report on..." assignments that we all did in third grade - and they require a lot of them! From my experience my guess is that the only reason they are still around is that no other institution has come along which offers the same variety of degree programs at such a low cost.
Very Limited Info -- Not Recommended. 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on December 30, 2007
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I have taken a couple courses at NCU.edu (NorthCentral University, Arizona) From my experience, this is a quick review. There is very little to almost no interaction with the mentors (aka professors). They only like to communicate via email. You are almost never able to pick up a phone and call someone. This can be especially challenging if you are taking your 1st set of classes and have questions about the format etc. The advisors also only provide assistance over web content & always ask you to refer to online documentation. This can get very old very quickly, as my perception is people take online courses as they are limited with the time they have, and would like to get responses fairly quickly. NCU staff & administration constantly push for students (or learners) to use the NCU messaging system. This is very archaic system that only allows sending messages (messaging) between ncu personnel. Also this message system has no interaction to the outside world .. so if you are travelling & get a message from someone, then you cannot respond from any email client -- you have to log into the NCU webpage & respond. I am finding that NCU online is very much aloof in terms of assisting students with any program or helping them review materials. If you were able to pick up a text book, and write an exam, to get a grade, and eventually get a degree -- this is what you will experience at NCU. It will certainly benefit if NCU put's some effort into their learner's online interface. its a very rudimentary system, put together to get a few students. However, now that they have a lot of student's signing up, it would be good to have a lot of interactive tools. Hope this information helps. Feel free to reach out if you have any questions. Thanks,
Answering concerns 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on December 28, 2007
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I would like to respond to concerns about "mentors" and their quality as instructors. In any college/university you will have good and bad instructors. It is the responsibility of the adult student to be an independent learner. This applies if you are sitting in a brick and mortar building....or taking classes by distance. In previous work at traditional schools, I have had classes that I felt were not as beneficial as others. I expect that to be the case at any school. Overall, I have been very satisfied with NCU. I should add that I work at a brick and mortar school. I believe NCU stacks up in every way.
Great Program 
By: t.sicotte (In Progress) on December 24, 2007
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This is a great program for thos prepared to work. Almost finished my MA and it has been challenging and varied enough to meet my needs. I highly recommned NCU.
Great Program 
By: t.sicotte (In Progress) on December 18, 2007
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This is a great program. For value and quality courses NCU compares well to many of the Bricks and Mortar schools. The format is challenging and requires a dedicated, motivated, organized aproach but it is worth the effort. I'm almost finished my masters and it has been a wonderful experience.
Great school. Good rigor. Doubtful accreditation. 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on December 18, 2007
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I began NCU's doctoral psychology program in 2006 and I am absolutely enjoying my learning experience. I have had great mentors and the academic work is quite rigorous and challenging. I love the focus on scholarly research and writing and I love the 100% online medium. Overall, I think NCUS is a great school. You cannot beat the financial value-NCU has one of the lowest tuition rates of any online school or most brick and mortar schools! The only thing that bothers me about NCU is the re-accreditation process that it is currently going through. For some reason, I have a lingering suspicion that the school will not be re-affirmed for accreditation. I think the accreditation board will probably require some sort of residency or weekly discussion forum or both. Who knows? My doubts may be unwarranted. Still, this bothers me because I would hate to have wasted good money on a school that will not be re-accreditated. If NCU loses its accreditation I will cut my loses and move on to another school without hestitation. But, this will not erase my love for the NCU learning experience. It is truly an outstanding school.
Excellence in Distance Learning 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on December 18, 2007
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You will be hard-pressed to find a credible university that you can earn a bachelors masters or doctorates at with this kind of quality. NCU allows its students to be anywhere in the world. I live overseas and have been continuing to earn my degree in business administration at NCU. I highly recommend this school as it is not only affordable, but actually creates an environment where you can learn. After attending Illinois State University, I actually like this university better. I am a terrible test taker and my grades would suffer over confusing multiple choice exams at Illinois State. At NCU, my exams are in the form of research papers, allowing me to explain myself. My GPA has gone up considerably and I already have employers lined up for when I graduate this summer. I love this university.
What you put in 
By: t.sicotte (In Progress) on December 18, 2007
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This is an excellent school.I've almost finished my Masters and it has taken a while but was well worth it. I had to produce a lot of written material because there are no formal tests but I believe this greatly helped my focus and enhanced the learning process. It has been a challenging and stimulating experience and I would recommend it to anyone who needs a flexible yet valuable program. You need to be self-motivated and well organized but it is definitely worth the money and effort spent.
Watch out 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on December 13, 2007
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So called Mentor did absolutely nothing to "facilitate" my learning. Got a generic "welcome aboard" message at the beginning of class along with a list of papers that I had to write. Zero interaction (other than, here's your grade). You are at the mercy of your mentor, who by the way you don't get to choose. Also, check out the incestuous faculty credentials. My mentor’s replies to my emails (which didn’t answer my questions) included spelling errors and misuse of “big words” – but what do I know, maybe the pace in which assignments are submitted is an “interglacial” part of the learning process. I will have to say that this instructor was "new" but her incompetence didn't save me from having to fork over the tuition money. At $850 plus books, it was a costly "learning experience"! You are required to use a special email system for all correspondence, which makes me thankful for Outlook. The learner portion of the website isn't very intuitive. Eventually I found a site map, which wasn't linked. . . One of the least expensive degree programs I found. Interlibrary loan staff person responded quickly to requests.
Preceding Questions 
By: propdrvn (In Progress) on December 12, 2007
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I am a student nearing the end of my MBA program, and I have been satisfied the whole way. I have three other degrees from bricks and mortars universities (Purdue University and Embry-Riddle) and the rigors of NCU academics are on par. Just like anything new, there will be plenty of people who don't want to change and/or feel threatened. Remember the old adage "if men were meant to fly, God would have given us wings"? It has been a century now, and I doubt there are many naysayers about that laughable and newfangled idea of flying. Online learning, just like flying, is a new medium for its purpose, and it is just taking off. Some "universities" will do it wrong (which is evidence for the naysayers), but many will do it right. Has train travel gone away because of the airplane? Will bricks and mortars learning go away because of the rise of online learning. I for one, believe that for every "changeaphobe's" steadfast view, it never turns out like they feared. Okay, onto the questions about accreditation and the apparent past bankruptcy of the owner. The accreditation issue is not much of an issue at all. Regionally, NCU is accredited in the same organization as Arizona State, University of Arizona, and my alma maters Purdue University and Embry-Riddle. Additionally, the Council for Higher Education Accreditation recognizes NCU -- (http://www.chea.org/search/actionInst.asp?CheaID=699) and (http://distancelearn.about.com/od/onlinecourses/a/MBAaccredit.htm) and (http://www.acbsp.org/index.php?module=sthtml&op=load&sid=s1_001). As for the owner's past bankruptcy, is not bankruptcy a common risk for entreprenuers? A bankruptcy does not a failure make. What I care about as a consumer -- not a student, a consumer -- is that the product I am buying is proven and accepted. The NCU product is exactly that, proven and accepted. To those people who have their finger on the NCU tuition trigger, put your worries aside. There will always be naysayers out there for any decision you make. Nevermind those armchair quarterbacks. If you've done the research, then YOU have more information than the quarterbacks could ever have, especially those who tried but failed and are disgruntled. Remember, this is a business decision for you. Don't treat it like you're in highschool trying to decide which university to go to. Treat it like an investment with a specific anticipated return, even if purely intrinsic (the joy of knowledge for example). In closing, just remember that the diploma mill threat is not indigenous to the online realm, it just seems like that because it is an easier market to enter than it was 10 years ago. Just go to the links I posted and that should be all the proof you need, for NCU or any other school you are investigating. Good luck! Jim
Question about accreditation 
By: mgaobe (In Progress) on November 24, 2007
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So far my experience has been good. Good mentors overall, positive experience with advising. My concern is about the accreditation. I have been checking the accrediting web site for NCU and see that they have issues with conflict of interest, ownership, and they are getting ready for reaccrediting. Given the history of the owner, the bankruptcies I found on google, being turned down for federal aid, etc. anyone who can provide feedback regarding chances of getting accredited again would be helpful. Otherwise, I am pulling out before I get too many credits into the process.
Questions 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on November 19, 2007
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Experience has been good. Worried about accreditation. Saw through google search owner had bankruptcies before - financial aid was denied due to owner's history with them.
Overall Very Good Institution 
By: richard (Graduate) on November 9, 2007
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I am in the process of finishing my eleventh and final master’s course at NCU. I can honestly say that it has been a rigorous process. JA, I am sorry to hear that you feel you have wasted your money on that course, but you may have had a bad professor or simply did not try hard enough in the course. It is very easy to skip much of the reading and slack off on your assignments. However, you will realize that you are not getting away with it once you have to assimilate the knowledge that you should have learned into coherent research papers. This is the reason that some individuals are simply not meant to take online courses; you have to have self-motivation since you do not have a professor force-feeding you material for two hours each day. I can honestly say that I am learning more now that I do my own research on my own time than back when I was attending different brick-and-mortar institutes and zoning out in class. As far as what you said about the academic advisors not returning emails fast enough; I sent an email to my academic advisor (Susan Lohn) at 1532 yesterday and I was reading her reply at 1541. I sent my next reply at 1543 and she replied at 1645. I pretty much always get a reply within an hour or two of sending a question. Unless you expect an instant response, I consider that to be pretty quick. To each their own, and I cannot understand what your exact experience has been. However, mine has been a great one, as has the majority of the learners I have heard from. V/R Richard
Negative reviews?? 
By: propdrvn (In Progress) on October 29, 2007
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I am absolutely flabbergasted by the (very few) negative responses on this board. Only one actually gave ideas on how to improve, the others just ranted and raved like spoiled children who didn't get their way on this item or that item. NCU has been a blessing in my educational journey. I have a management Masters from another online school that is also a B&M school. That particular school (Embry-Riddle) has one of the top engineering programs in the nation and specifically partnered up with NCU to create a bridge program for doctoral learners and the creation of other Masters programs. I highly doubt a regionally accredited and well respected school such as Embry-Riddle would pick NCU if it did not have the utmost of respect for NCU's programs and efficiencies. And by the way, for the individual who referred to the "regional accreditation" of NCU, your sarcasm is completely misplaced and unwarranted. NCU has the exact same accreditation of Arizona's state school system, Embry-Riddle, my undergrad alma mater (Purdue University), and many many others. NCU is about working professionals trying to improve their careers and/or gain knowledge for more insight into their own profession. There is no hand holding. This is the real world kiddies, and just like the real world, you are assigned the work and told when to have it done. You can always ask for advice from those who know more (NCU mentors), but the direction you take to achieve the goal is yours and yours alone. If you can't take the idea of setting your own direction, then you really have no business being at NCU or any advanced university program for that matter. Jim
NCU is a Quality Educational Experience 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on October 27, 2007
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Northcentral is a quality educational experience. The courses are engaging with supportive instructors (mentors). There is a community feeling at the school. I'm working on an EdD and learning far more than I ever imagined I would. It's a great journey!
Happy student 
By: kbutler777 (In Progress) on October 16, 2007
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I have attended North Central University (NCU) since Jan 2005 and have found that the staff and mentors are there to support the students. I was nervous at first about online education, but have been very happy with my experience so far at NCU. I have developed better time management skills and feel that I more self reliant. I would recommend NCU to anyone that works full time and wishes to continue their education. It is not an easy path, but very worth while.
Business Administration PhD 
By: Localboys (In Progress) on October 15, 2007
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I have been extremely pleased with NCU & the coursework I have completed toward a PhD in Business Admin - Mgt. Engr & Tech. I am a past Univ. of Phoenix (not a good experience for me) DMO candidate & Univ. of La Verne DPA candidate (great but expensive program). In virtually every area (Teaching acumen, Student support, Level of intellectual exchange, Tuition costs, etc.), NCU presents the best program there is today for an On-line PhD Degree Program. I hope to complete this program by Winter '08 to Spring '09 & plan to both consult & teach with a little writing & a Fulbright Scholarship stint thrown in for good measure!
Great school - Great Education 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on October 15, 2007
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I have completed 3 degrees from B&M schools, including an MBA. NCU's curriculum is indeed rigorous and appropriate. In my experience at NCU, nothing less than scholarly writing is acceptable. Reading, researching, reflecting, writing, and discussing (asynchronously) keep me very busy for each course. I have been in the PhD Education program since January 2007 and am learning a great deal. My mentors have been timely and thorough in their responses. My advisor has been very helpful in a situation where I had a difficult mentor (every school has some difficult faculty). Overall, I know I am getting a quality education! I strongly encourage anyone seeking an accredited college education to consider NCU.
An outstanding program for working adults 
By: dwgerard (In Progress) on October 14, 2007
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I shopped around at several major brick and mortar universities and all of them would have forced me to quit my job and become a full time student with nearly no income to support my family. I then looked at the various on-line universities, and found several of them to be very attractive, but none of them offered the accreditation and value that NCU offered. As a retiremed military veteran, NCU offered an excellent tuition rate, and once I began my DBA program, discovered that the education process was significantly better than my expectations. I have taken a few computer based course offered by the Government, and nearly all of them left a lot to be desired, which I feared would also be the case at NCU or any other on-line university. I was pleasantly surprised at the smooth function of NCU's online system, the positive feedback from instructors for work submitted, and the vibrant forums to communicate with instructors and other students at NCU. I already feel more connected with my classmates at NCU than I did at any of the more traditional universities I have attended, as I am conversing with students from all areas of specialization and not just my immediate classmates. I have had in depth discussions with fellow student in Psychology, Education and other Business specializations, which never would have occured in my previous education programs. I heartily recommend NCU as a choice for pursuing a graduate program. One word of advice, it is not an easy program either, as you will spend a significant amount of time on each class. It is possible to move quickly through the program, but it will demand much of your time and efforts to do so. I have only had one off weekend in last six months, and I do not expect many more for the remainder of my program. It is a price I am willing to pay, but that may not be so in your case. If not, then look elsewhere for your program, as this one will demand such an effort.
NCU 
By: dalertodd (In Progress) on October 14, 2007
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I have been attending NCU since 1/04 and have found the program to be very satisfying. The instructors require you to work hard and present material in a way that builds on the assignments. In my hundreds of interactions I have found the the instructors to be professional and supportive. I highly recommend this university to any student wanting to improve their education. I have used the education at Northcentral University to improve my professional standing in the community.
Educational Satisfaction 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on October 3, 2007
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I am a PhD learner (Industrial/Organizational Psychology) in the Business Administration program and I absolutely love it. I switched from Capella to NCU last year and only wished I had done it so much earlier. I would recommend NCU to anyone.
Dissertation support services in School of busines 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on September 15, 2007
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I just found this blog and wanted to offer some personal insight from personal experience. I am working on my Business PHD at Northcentral. I have a co worker working on her PHD at a well known California state university. We are both in the proposal writing stage. We exchange ideas/swap scare stories as all doctoral students do. I submitted my initial proposal and got recommendations back from my Mentor. My coworker wanted to see areas that I needed to hone prior to resubmitting for the next review. She took the feedback that I had gotten and reviewed her own materials. she has been trying to get an appointment with her 'assigned' Chair for 2 months. She proudly shared that if she gets through her own doctoral program it will be because of what I have taught her from my NCU learnings/feedback. Is my proposal good yet? No. Does that please me? No. I'm exhausted but I know when I finish, I'll have a product that I will be proud and will publish well. As I see typos/methodology flaws in studies from other schools, I just smile knowing the officials at BTM will not let this happen to me. The doc program at Northcentral is hard but I suspect it is easier than many other schools because of the support systems they provide. While my coworker has waited 2 months to get feedback from her Chair, I got feedback within 2 days (they have to do it in 14 days tho). The School of Business also offers 'chat with the reviewer' teleconferences each month that I (and now my coworker) participate. NCU is all about student support, it hard but they make themselves available.
PhD Program-Psychology 
By: bkemery (In Progress) on August 30, 2007
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I am currently attending NCU in the PhD program-psychology and I must admit it has been a wonderful experience--I am really enjoying the distance learning expereince with NCU. The courses are difficult, however, you do learn and the mentors are great!
So far so good 
By: wagontire (In Progress) on August 25, 2007
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I enrolled in the PhD program (Business Administration with Marketing Specialization) last week and am scheduled to start in October. Although I haven't started the program as of yet, I have done quite a bit of research on other Online PhD programs and have found that NCU is the ONLY Online college that offers PhD degrees with a Marketing Emphasis. The level of support I received by my Enrollment Counselor and Academic Adviser was good...no complaints. I am currently earning my MBA at University of Phoenix (Awesome school) and NCU is letting me start on my Specialization courses first so I can transfer my MBA courses in (from UoP) next year. University of Phoenix is a great college too (I earned my BA degree from the ground campus in my area and am currently doing the Masters program online). Anyhow, I start my first PhD course with NCU in October, so I will write back again and let you know how it goes.
MBA Public Administration 
By: cuvamp (In Progress) on August 19, 2007
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I am currently enrolled in my fourth class at NCU and will start my fifth course in September. I am pursuing a MBA degree with a concentration on Public Administration. I have been totally satisfied with my studies. The course are a bit arduous at times and can require a lot of research and writing, but this challenge you to form an opinion and establish an ideology, which results in learning! My only problem to date is a very small one; every time you complete a course you get a grade report. This grade report I guess helps students who need proof of studies to be reimbursed by their employee. I do not fall in that category, but my grade report has me affiliated with the US Navy. I am an ex-Navy guy, but have no affiliation and do not get any type of tuition assistance. I sent several e-mails to my advisor and the affiliation still has not been removed. It is not a big deal, but it should be a problem that is easily fixed. I would recommend NCU to anyone who is looking to advance themselves through gaining more knowledge. The workload is heavy at times and can take up a lot of your free time, however NCU‘s degree is worth it. I look forward to my future classes and hope to advance my educational goals even further! Ray Vampran
Refund Problems 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on July 25, 2007
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I planned to take two courses as a graduate student at large purely for licensure purposes - I already have two masters. When I started the first course I was shocked at the number of assignments, papers, etc. that were due each week. I have a 4.0 in my graduate degrees and am not afraid of work, but they clearly seemed excessive, including an assignment to make a videotape - I don't have that kind of equipment!! So, I dropped the two courses, and after two months am still waiting for the $2800 refund!! They keep saying they're in the process but haven't received it yet. I am going to lodge a complaint with the BBB as the next step.
PhD At NCU 
By: Albizu71 (In Progress) on July 21, 2007
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I am currently working on my PhD at NCU in Business with a specialization in Organizational leadership and I have to say that my experience has been nothing but pleasant. They require alot of work and provide you with excellent feedback on your work. I highly give this school 2 thumbs up for quality education and value. This school is definately the better way to earn your degree.
Mixed reviews 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on June 25, 2007
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I've taken 3 courses now in my doctoral studies towards my DBA in Management. I must say, in all honesty, that I have very mixed feelings about the school. Other reviewers comment that the staff is frequently unavailable, and I have to agree. When I have questions over an assignment, they frequently go unanswered for days. Also, I find that the mentors are more preoccupied with the format of the research papers rather than the content. I'm critisized at length because, this or that, is not properly formatted and has to be re-submitted, thus wasting a lot of time. This is total rubbish to me. The assignments themselves are often either confusing, or, overwhelming (too much reading and writing). My thoughts going into the program was that this would allow me to be more flexible about family and job. The reality is that it is not. I am having to spend far more time away from job and family to complete some of these inane assignments than I feel comfortable doing. My GPA is not the best (nor the worst), but I feel that all of my assignments were subjectively graded based on no real set of guidelines. The library is a joke. The research material itself is fine but the search engine is horrible (try to re-find an article you found the day before, you'll see what I mean). I think this could be a great school if they hired professional instructors, not the "leading professionals in their respective fields". These leading professionals in their field may be wonderful...in their field. But that doesn't necessarily make them good instructors. Also, fix the damn library search engine.
Northcentral University 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on June 18, 2007
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Northcentral U. is one of the best univerities in the country. I have 4 degrees (including a Ph.D.) from 3 others famous universities in the US and I think Northcentral is equall (If not better) than most of them. The amount of work required by Northcentral for a Ph.D. degree is around 25% more than it's required by a traditional university. The mentors participate actively in onluine discussions and dissertation committee works pretty fast compared with traditional universities. I am very happy I decided to get the 2nd Ph.D. from this universtity.
Rigor and Integrity 
By: hans_hinding (In Progress) on June 5, 2007
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I have attended several campus-based public colleges and universities in Canada and the United States throughout my career. I believe Northcentral University has established a respectable baseline for academic rigor and scholastic integrity as an emerging 21st century online school. I'm enrolled part-time in their Ph.D. in Business Administration (MIS specialization) program while employed as a Vice President of Information Technology at a regional financial institution. This year, the School of Business and Technology Management at Northcentral University achieved programmatic accreditation standing with the Association of Collegiate Business Schools and Programs (www.acbsp.org) in addition to its standing as a regionally accredited institution (www.chea.org). Regards, Hans J. Hinding, MBA, MBCS
Lack of Support in the program from the mentors 
By: Hamdi_LF (In Progress) on May 26, 2007
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The idea of having NCU degree seemed to be great, but the problem arise from the lack of mentors support to their learners and the academic advisors. As I started my Ph.D program, They don't tell you anything that direct you to the proper source. You are basically on your own. I have an MBA and I got 30 credits transferred. The main problem is that when you start a Ph.D, One may need a lot of support all along, but the beginning is always hard. I just wanna say that it is extremely hard to even get their support. There is no standard grading system, by which you can pinpoint your grade. It is all up to the mentor and what they decide to do with you, so if the mentor does not clarify what wants you end up losing out, especially if your name sounds foreign like mine. I got an (A)in almost all of my assignments, but the mentor sometimes read the first two lines of my assignment and tells to resubmit and you already lost 10% of your assignment grade without even knowing why and if you discuss it, they may screw up your entire grade of the class, because there is standarized grading system that all mentors can abide by. It is important to mention to you that My MBA GPA is an (A)and I still maintain an (A) in my first classes assignment. The bottomline is you need to check out different online schools like Walden, Argosy or somewhere else as long as they provide a more standardized grading system and strong support for their learners, because you a mentor to be on your side to help you achieve your academic goals and be on your side during the process.
Dissertation 
By: hamptonspress (In Progress) on May 2, 2007
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I am concerned. I am in the middle of completing my specializations and hear that the dissertation process is very long and no one to speak to about it. I do correspond with many students that are in the process. They seem very, very disappointed. The University has a new president, a new Chair for the Bus. Dept. and I hear the mentors are new and usually are of no help. Maybe we should compile a list of students and go to the Northcentral accreditation region with our grief. Keep all your e-mail and attempted telephone contacts so if and when this happens we have a leg to stand on. I think it is lucridous that people write their mentors asking where they stand on their dissertation and they do not get an answer and when they do it is that the chair of the Dept. who does not respond or tel. calls or e-mail needs to approve it. Let's do something collectively. E-mail me with your concerns. I have a great deal of experience in the accreditation process and will comply a complaint to them that will get their attention.
A great choice for busy people 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on April 18, 2007
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I am doing a PhD at NCU, and am enjoying it a great deal. The program is not for everybody, but suits someone in my situation very well. Here is my story: 1. I could study anywhere. I have good bricks-and-mortar undergraduate & MBA degrees, a decent GMAT etc. 2. I have a demanding job that I really enjoy. The cost of taking a leave of absence to study full-time at a great school would not make financial sense. 3. I did extensive research, and find that the NCU curriculum in my field is the best thought-out and most aligned to my needs. I am including bricks-and-mortar schools in this analysis. I have designed curriculum for a top school, and I know good design when I see it. 4. I am not trying to pass off my PhD as anything it isn't. I don't think my PhD will change my life, or my opportunities - my personal makeup will continue to drive my success. 5. I don't want to be in a cohort - been there, done that. I love teams, but I have my hands full of them at work, and don't want to either "carry" or have to wait for other group members at school. 6. The nature of my work is that there are busy times and slow times. Being able to speed up or slow down my progress through courses is a huge benefit. 7. I am genuinely interested in my subject, and am doing this as a hobby as much as anything. I have "gotten ahead" plenty already, and am mostly looking to add a little brain food to the tail end of my career. 8. I don't need my hand held. I am prepared to learn on my own and take a risk on my assignments (nobody will be looking at my 'marks'). I don't need someone to prescribe every little step of the way or tell me "exactly what they expect" from me, beyond the general marching orders. The bottom line is that I haven't chosen NCU out of lack of better options. I am genuinely impressed with their program and their delivery style. It isn't easy by any means, and is certainly not light-weight. I would say if your story is anything like mine, and you are favorably impressed with NCU's programs - go for it! Best of luck on whatever choice you make...
Long, Self-Directed Road 
By: eekress (In Progress) on April 16, 2007
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I have just completed my Ph.D. program (Psychology) at NCU. It took me nearly 4 full years. I entered the program with two MA's. I work full time and have two teens. I took one class at a time, taking nearly 1 full year for the dissertation process....data collection, statistical breakdown, writing of dissertation, completion of the oral defense. Whew!!! NCU worked for me, I could easily contact my Professors, and received quick turnaround on my written work. I only had one negative experience with a Professor, most were helpful, supportive, encouraging. The course work was rigorus. I learned a great deal, and feel my degree is well earned. The university is North Central Acredited, I would never have wasted my time if it did not carry this qualification. If you are looking to expand your education, and do not need the support of face-to-face direction, I would highly recommed this University.
NCU is no joke! 
By: louisfletcher (In Progress) on April 5, 2007
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NCU is a great experience. I have an EdD (ABD) from a major brick and mortar university, so I can tell that NCU is providing a quality program. Mentors, facilitator, professors...what's in a name? The School of Education is a professional operation with a responsive Dean and great Mentors and Advisors. I am in the final phases of my PhD in Education and I can tell you that rigor exists at NCU. Some folks are looking for undergrad like programs that hold your hand and feed you with a big spoon. The reality is that at the doctoral level in most universities you are on an island and that is why up to 50% do not finish. My "Mentors" have provided timely and effective support without fail. Irregardless of the degree level, on-line education requires independent self-motivated individuals and everyone is not prepared for the challenge. The people who spew venom usually have a hidden agenda or are just unhappy in general. Everyone is not compatible with every teaching style, so if you do not like a program, leave it without trying to trash the program and understand that others will continue to thrive. Constructive criticism is useful and the NCU administration does listen and has made changes I and other students requested using the on-line discussion forums. Destructive criticism is the non-goal oriented unproductive ranting of folks who "believe" they can identify problems but do not have a clue about how to create solutions. As to cost; compared to similarly accredited brick and mortar programs NCU is a real value and most student have stated in the discussion forums that they would be willing to pay more as NCU adds more specific accreditations (e.g., business, psychology, etc.) to the augment the current regional accreditation which is the gold standard in US education. Those who want a cheap education with a lot of hand holding look elsewhere but those that want a valuable education taught in an independent adult-centered format NCU is the place for you.
No Way 
By: jsavard (In Progress) on April 5, 2007
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I have an undergraduate degree in Engineering and two Masters degrees from name institutions. DO NOT attempt to insinuate that the education offered by Northcentral University is a joke ... the rigor of the curriculum is comprehensive and demanding. Jim Savard
NCU is a value 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on March 28, 2007
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Certainly there are issues for Learners in the distance learning programs. The value of working when the Learners want means it may be harder to have contact with Mentors, but when one is at the doctoral level contact with Mentors should not be all that necessary until one is in the research/dissertation phase. Anytime I read someone asserting the rigor is not there I have to smile, as it is always on the doer, not the evaluator. If I choose to not apply much I should not expect much, but if I put some muscle into the job, perhaps I will discover the required rigor is greater. Often I figure the naysayers are folks that have difficulty "getting there." If you want to get that doctorate you have been dreaming about, and believe you have what it takes to measure up, give NCU a try. I have every belief you can succeed ... if you want to, and will take the personal steps to ensure it. As is sometimes said ... belly up to the bar.
NCU is a Joke 
By: Anonymous (Graduate) on February 26, 2007
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What a joke. NCU has no rigor. All of the "mentors" (not even called professors) are rarely available... not that you'd need them anyway. Every class is the same. Read the text and either answer the canned questions in each chapter or write a "paper" which is no more than a repeat of the questions - only rephrased. Financial collection problems are common. Academic "advisors" are no help in sorting out degree options. Tuition just took a HUGE hike along with "fees". The "department heads" are not available. I've called mine several times, left emails, left voicemails, and even sent registered letters to him about issues I have. To date... NO feedback. Avoid the place like the plague. No value.
NCU Suits Me Just Fine 
By: Anonymous (In Progress) on February 11, 2007
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